Configuring l2 and l3 relay features, L2 and l3 relay overview, What is l3 dhcp relay – Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 919: Configuring l2 and l3 relay, Features, Configuring

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Configuring L2 and L3 Relay Features

919

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Configuring L2 and L3 Relay

Features

This chapter describes how to configure the L2 DHCP Relay, L3 DHCP

Relay, and IP Helper features on PowerConnect M6220, M6348, M8024, and

M8024-k switches.
The topics covered in this chapter include:

L2 and L3 Relay Overview
Default L2/L3 Relay Values
Configuring L2 and L3 Relay Features (Web)
Configuring L2 and L3 Relay Features (CLI)
Relay Agent Configuration Example

L2 and L3 Relay Overview

When a DHCP client and server are in the same IP subnet, they can directly

connect to exchange IP address requests and replies. However, buying and

maintaining a DHCP server on each subnet can be expensive and is often

impractical. The relay features on the PowerConnect M6220, M6348, M8024,

and M8024-k switches can help enable communication between DHCP

clients and DHCP servers that reside in different subnets. Configuring L3

DHCP relay also enables the bootstrap protocol (BOOTP) relay.

What Is L3 DHCP Relay?

Network infrastructure devices can be used to relay packets between a DHCP

client and server on different subnets. Such a device, an Layer 3 Relay agent,

is often a router or L3 switch. The L3 relay agent must have an IP interface on

the client subnets and, if it does not have an IP interface on the server’s

subnet, it should be able to route traffic toward the server’s subnet.

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